The Korean War 18.3. The 38 th Parallel When WW II ended, Korea became a divided nation. North of the 38th parallel, a line that crosses Korea at 38 degrees.

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Presentation on theme: "The Korean War 18.3. The 38 th Parallel When WW II ended, Korea became a divided nation. North of the 38th parallel, a line that crosses Korea at 38 degrees."— Presentation transcript:

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The Korean War 18.3

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The 38 th Parallel When WW II ended, Korea became a divided nation. North of the 38th parallel, a line that crosses Korea at 38 degrees north latitude, Japanese troops surrendered to Soviet forces. South of this line, they surrendered to US troops. As in Germany, two nations developed. One was the Communist industrial north, set up by the Soviets. The other was the non-Communist rural south, supported by the Western powers.

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War in Korea On June 25, 1950, North Koreans swept across the 38th parallel in a surprise attack on South Korea. President Truman was convinced that the N. Korean aggressors were repeating what the Axis powers had done in the 1930’s. Truman’s policy of containment was being put to the test. And he decided to help S. Korea resist communism.

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War in Korea S. Korea asked the United Nations to intervene. When the matter came to a vote in the Security Council, the Soviets were absent. They had refused to take part in the Council to protest admission of Nationalist China (Taiwan), rather than Communist China, into the UN.

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War in Korea As a result, the USSR could not veto the UN’s plan to send a force to Korea to stop the invasion. 15 nations, including the US and Britain, participated under the command of General Douglas MacArthur. By September 1950, N. Korea controlled the entire peninsula except for a tiny area in the southeast. That month, MacArthur launched a surprise attack. About half of the N. Koreans surrendered and the rest retreated.

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The Fighting Continues The UN troops pursued the retreating army across the 38th parallel into N. Korea They pushed them almost to the Chinese border. The UN forces were mostly from the US and The Chinese felt threatened by these troops and by an US fleet off their coast. In October 1950, China sent 300,000 troops into N. Korea

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The Fighting Continues The Chinese outnumbered the UN forces. By 1951, they had pushed UN troops out of North Korea. The Chinese then moved into S Korea and captured the capital of Seoul. MacArthur called for a nuclear attack against China. Truman viewed MacArthur as reckless. “We are trying to prevent a world war, not start one,” he said. MacArthur tried to go over the President’s head by taking his case to Congress and the press. In response, Truman removed him.

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The Fighting Continues By 1952, UN troops had regained control of S. Korea Finally, in 1953, the UN forces and N Korea signed a cease-fire agreement. The border between the two Koreas was set near the 38th parallel, almost where it had been before the war. In the meantime, 4 million soldiers and civilians had died

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Aftermath of the War After the war, Korea remained divided. A demilitarized zone, which still exists, separated the two countries. In N Korea, the Communist dictator Kim Il Sung established collective farms, developed heavy industry, and built up the military. His son Kim Jong Il took power. Under his rule, they developed nuclear weapons but had serious economic problems Kim Jong Un has recently taken power in N. Korea after Kim Jong Il’s death.

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Aftermath of the War S Korea prospered, due in part to massive aid from the US and other countries. S Korea concentrated on developing its industry and expanding foreign trade. In 1987 they adopted of a democratic constitution and S Korea established free elections. During the s, S Korea had one of the highest economic growth rates in the world.

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Aftermath Political differences have kept the two Koreas apart, despite periodic discussions of reuniting the country. North Korea’s possession of nuclear weapons is a major obstacle. The United States still keeps troops in South Korea.

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Assignment 1. Why did Korea develop into two separate nations? 2. Describe how both the US and China became involved in this conflict? 3. What strategy did General MacArthur want to follow when China became involved? 4. What was the outcome of this war? 5. Compare and contrast the situations in North and South Korea after the war.

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War Breaks Out in Vietnam 18.3 pt 2

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War Breaks Out in Vietnam The involvement of the US in Vietnam stemmed from its Cold War containment policy. After WWII, stopping the spread of communism was the principal goal of US foreign policy.

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War Breaks Out in Vietnam France had controlled Vietnam since the early 1900’s Many Vietnamese people wanted independence A young Vietnamese Communist, Ho Chi Minh, led revolts and strikes against the French.

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War Breaks Out in Vietnam The French responded by jailing Vietnamese protesters. They sentenced Ho to death. He fled, but returned to Vietnam in 1941after the Japanese seized control of his country in WWII Ho Chi Minh believed that independence would follow Japan’s defeat, but France intended to regain its colony.

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The Fighting Begins Vietnamese Nationalists and Communists joined to fight the French armies. The French held most major cities, but Ho’s army the Vietminh, had widespread support in the countryside. The Vietminh used hit-and-run tactics to confine the French to the cities.

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The Fighting Begins In France the people began to doubt that their colony was worth the lives and money the struggle cost. In 1954, the French surrendered to Ho Chi Minh The US did not want to see Communism spread in Asia

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The Domino Theory In the US, President Eisenhower described this threat in terms of the domino theory. He said The SE Asian nations were like a row of dominos. The fall of one to communism would lead to the fall of its neighbors. This theory became a major justification for US foreign policy during the Cold War era.

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Vietnam— A Divided Country Vietnam was divided at 17° north latitude. North of that line, Communist forces governed. To the south, the US and France set up a government under the dictator Ngo Dinh Diem,

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Vietnam— A Divided Country Communist guerrillas, called Vietcong, began to gain strength in the south. In 1963, a group of S. Vietnamese generals had Diem assassinated. It appeared that a takeover by the Communist Vietcong was inevitable.

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The US Gets Involved Faced with the possibility of a Communist victory, the US decided to increase its involvement. In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson falsely told Congress that N. Vietnamese patrol boats had attacked U.S. ships in the Gulf of Tonkin. As a result, Congress authorized U.S. troops to fight in Vietnam.

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The US Gets Involved The US had the best-equipped, most advanced army in the world. Yet it faced two major difficulties. ◦ First, U.S. soldiers were fighting a guerrilla war in unfamiliar jungle terrain. ◦ Second, the government that they were defending was becoming more unpopular. Unable to win a decisive victory on the ground, the US turned to air power. This bombing strengthened peasants’ opposition to the S Vietnamese government.

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The US Withdraws During the late 1960s, the war grew increasingly unpopular in the US. People began to protest the tremendous loss of life in a conflict on the other side of the world. President Richard Nixon began withdrawing U.S. troops in 1969.

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The US Withdraws Nixon had a plan called Vietnamization. It allowed for U.S. troops to gradually pull out, while the S Vietnamese increased their combat role. In response to protests and political pressure at home, Nixon kept withdrawing U.S. troops. The last troops left in1973.

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The US Withdraws In 1975, the N Vietnamese overran S Vietnam. The war ended, but more than 1.5 million Vietnamese and 58,000 Americans lost their lives

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Assignment 1. What did US involvement in Vietnam stem from? 2. What was the domino theory? 3. What event was used to justify US troops entering Vietnam? 4. What were two major obstacles that the US face fighting in Vietnam? 5. What influenced President Nixon to withdraw the US troops? Explain his plan to withdraw US troops.